Miter, a workforce management platform built for the construction industry, today announced the launch of Miter Safety, a set of new tools designed to make safety part of day-to-day work on construction jobsites, not something managed separately in the back office.

Miter is adding safety to the same system contractors already use for payroll, HR, time tracking, and workforce operations. The result is something standalone safety tools can’t offer: a single place where safety training and reporting are connected to every worker, crew, and job.

Crews can capture hazards, complete inspections, conduct toolbox talks, and report incidents directly from their phones with this system. Today, many construction companies manage safety through a mix of spreadsheets, standalone tools, and manual processes, limiting visibility across jobs. Now these activities can be managed from the same system contractors already use to run their business, giving leaders a clearer view of safety performance and making it easier for field teams to participate as work is happening.

Safety training and certifications can be assigned, tracked, and completed in the same place, tied to the same worker records used for payroll and HR. It’s a level of integration that standalone safety tools, which sit outside the HR system entirely, can’t replicate.

Contractors can also see safety performance with far more context because safety activity is tied to jobs, crews, supervisors, and hours worked. Leaders can compare jobsites, understand which supervisors are seeing more incidents, and track metrics like TRIR using actual hours worked without pulling data together from multiple systems.

“The best contractors make safety their number one priority. It’s how you show your people they matter. There’s nothing more important than making sure your people go home to their families every night,” said Connor Watumull, co-founder and CEO of Miter.

The product also uses AI to reduce the manual work involved in safety reporting, lowering the barrier to participation and helping teams surface issues before they become incidents. Crews can capture hazards using photos or voice notes, and that input is compiled into observations or incident reports, making it faster to document issues in the field. Teams can generate toolbox talks and inspection checklists from a topic or job description, helping standardize safety processes without additional administrative work.

Miter Safety gives contractors a clearer, more complete view of safety across their operations, without lengthy setup or the complexity that comes with stitching together separate systems. The platform includes dashboards showing incident trends, observation activity, and safety meeting participation across jobs, crews, and supervisors, helping teams identify risks earlier and improve safety programs over time.